Alright guys...somebody asked me how I got IE9 64-bit as my default browser and the answer is, by going into "Internet Options" >> "Programs" >> "Make default". It tells you you can't do it, but in reality you can. My screenshots:
IE9.. just about as fast as firefox 3.6 in the peacekeeper benchmark.. if you bench firefox with 3 open tabs while installing IE9 and defragging your HDD simultaneously
If I still had it.. you can find one just like it with a search for "too many toolbars"any chance of getting a copy of the larger pic you used for you sig?
Perhaps an entirely new OS, whoever it is, they're running Vista. :shock:I find it needs a better download manager .
What it needed is a new user.. The guy's name was probably PebkacPerhaps an entirely new OS, whoever it is, they're running Vista. :shock:I find it needs a better download manager .
If I still had it.. you can find one just like it with a search for "too many toolbars"any chance of getting a copy of the larger pic you used for you sig?
edit.. found it ..I've never seen one that bad in my own experience, but I can easily imagine what using that particular system must've been like
Mad you're missing a few,
View attachment 98495
What's a browser without everyone's favorite purple ape.
:roflmao:
forgot all about that one :roflmao::roflmao::roflmao:Microsoft's IE9 off limits to most Windows PCs
Two-thirds of the world's Windows machines still run XP, which can't run IE9
By Gregg Keizer
September 16, 2010 01:45 PM ET
Computerworld - Microsoft may have a tough time building significant market share for its new Internet Explorer 9 (IE9) browser because eligible users are in the minority.
Several analysts agreed that Microsoft has its work cut out for it, at least in the short term, because IE9 won't run on Windows XP, the aged-but-still-dominant operating system.
Microsoft omitted the still-popular XP from the supported OS list because, among other things, IE 9 speeds up page rendering and composition by tapping the graphics processor in newer PCs. Windows XP lacks support for the Direct2D API, which IE9 uses to accelerate content rendering.